Jean Maurice Henri Gautheroux (11 February 1909 â 14 October 1986) was a French footballer who played as a midfielder for CA Paris and the French national team in the late 1920s.
In 1959 and 1960, he co-directed 13 matches of the French national team.
Born in the Lalinde on 11 February 1909, Gautheroux began his football career at CA Paris in 1927, aged 18. Together with René Quentier, Marcel Langiller, and the Laurent brothers (Jean and Lucien), he was a member of the CA Paris team that reached the 1928 Coupe de France final at Colombes on 6 May, which ended in a 3âÂÂ1 loss to Red Star. The following day, the journalists of the French newspaper Le Miroir des sports described him as having "only 19, but plays with the poise and foresight of a 30-year-old, served his forwards, both through openings to the wings and through passes to the center.
Two years later, on 23 February 1930, the 21-year-old Gautheroux, now a RC France player, earned his first (and only) international cap for France in a friendly match against Portugal at Porto, which ended in a 0âÂÂ2 loss. He had to wait six years for his next appearance for France on 13 December 1936, now a RC Roubaix player, in another friendly, but this time against Yugoslavia, helping his side to a 1âÂÂ0 victory. The following day, the journalists of the French newspaper L'Auto (currently known as L'ÃÂquipe stated that he "did not have the necessary authority at any time during the game", and added that he "never imposed himself; conscientious and diligent, he tried to do well but only had a very average match".
After leaving Roubaix in 1938, he briefly returned to CA Paris, before joining Red Star, where he retired in 1941, aged 32. In total, he played 88 matches in Ligue 1.
From June 1959 until October 1960, Gautheroux was a member of the selection committee of the French football team, a triumvirate made up of himself, Georges Verriest, and Alexis Thépot, and which oversaw a total of 13 matches.
Gautheroux died in Maisons-Alfort on 14 October 1986, at the age of 77.